Abstract

Tamoxifen can stimulate the growth of some breast tumors and others can become resistant to tamoxifen. We previously showed that unliganded ERbeta inhibits ERalpha-mediated proliferation of MCF-7 cells. We investigated if tamoxifen might have a potential negative effect on some breast cancer cells by blocking the effects of unliganded ERbeta on gene regulation. Gene expression profiles demonstrated that unliganded ERbeta upregulated 196 genes in MCF-7 cells. Tamoxifen significantly inhibited 73 of these genes by greater than 30%, including several growth-inhibitory genes. To explore the mechanism whereby unliganded ERbeta activates genes and how tamoxifen blocks this effect, we used doxycycline-inducible U2OS-ERbeta cells to produce unliganded ERbeta. Doxycycline produced a dose-dependent activation of the NKG2E, MSMB and TUB3A genes, which was abolished by tamoxifen. Unliganded ERbeta recruitment of SRC-2 to the NKG2E gene was blocked by tamoxifen. Our findings suggest that tamoxifen might exert a negative effect on ERbeta expressing tumors due to its antagonistic action on unliganded ERbeta.

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